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German Gang Jailed For Creating â‚¬12m Trojan Horse, Sophos Reports

Sophos has welcomed the sentencing to jail of 2 men who infected more than 100k computers with a Trojan horse that generated profits exceeding â‚¬12m.

A court in Osnabrück sentenced one of the men to four years in jail, and the other to a 39 month sentence, for their part in a criminal scheme that subverted innocent internet users' PCs with a Trojan horse that dialed premium rate 0190 phone numbers to contact an adult website. The men, aged 31 and 35 years old, amassed their substantial illegal profits from the premium rate phone calls made via the modems of infected PCs between July 2002 and September 2003.

"Despite the holiday season, it's a sure bet that these hackers won't be feeling particularly festive. Having infected a staggering 100,000 computers and run up huge phone bills for the unsuspecting users, the culprits are now facing Christmas in the slammer," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos. "The German authorities must be commended for bringing these offenders to justice, and other hackers should look long and hard at the punishment dished out and ask themselves whether, in the long run, internet crime really pays."

Such was the scale of the operation that the prosecution asked the court to fine the men 7.75 million Euros in addition to the jail sentence, however this request was rejected for legal reasons. Earlier in 2006, two other men were jailed for 18 and 22 months in connection with the case.

Sophos recommends that all computer users should ensure that they are running an automatically updated anti-virus product, security patches and firewall software.

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